On 3/26/2012 10:12 AM, Andrew Sullivan wrote:
> On Sun, Mar 25, 2012 at 03:16:16PM -0700, Tim Bray wrote:
>> On Sun, Mar 25, 2012 at 1:47 PM, Michael Richardson<mcr at sandelman.ca> wrote:
>>>> Why is this our problem?
>>> Why isn't a bug in the MAC/Windows printing eco-system, that apparently
>>> .txt files with ^L characters no longer work?
...
> I agree. Another way to put this is that, when the line-printer page
> layout was adopted as a "format", there was an actual interoperability
> reason for it: that's what printers did.
...
> We don't use line printers any more,
The current ASCII-based format has a number of different characteristics and
they serve a number of different issues.
^L is for line printers. No, we don't use those anymore. But we do use
printers. That is, there is still utility in have page-oriented constructs.
(But notice, please, how abstract the word "construct" is)
The other ASCII-based characteristics were/are important not (just) for printers
but for all rendering. It was (and I suspect still is) a least common
denominator. That remarkable lack of ambition has been a remarkable benefit; it
has facilitated very easy, universal access over 40 years. Let's not lose the
philosophy.
Many people have -- probably legitimately -- had some long-standing
unhappinesses with the format. Today is providing an opportunity to re-hash
those issues, in spite of having no new arguments for them. I'll suggest that
those issues are fine as secondary points, not primary ones. Primary ones ought
to be real and current problems, not real and old unhappiness.
The primary point that has been fundamentally irritating and embarrassing for
perhaps 20 years is the lack of support for non-ASCII characters.
The primary point that is bordering on being a showstopper against universal,
easy utility is the vastly different range of rendering environments, especially
due to tablets and phones. The existing line--based and page-based conventions
do get in the way of readability.
So let's distinguish between enhancements that have always been nice but that
we've lived reasonable well without, versus real and immediate problems that
need "solving".
d/
--
Dave Crocker
Brandenburg InternetWorking
bbiw.net